Movie Acting Debate: Games of Thrones Star Sean Bean Says Intimacy Coordinators ‘Spoil the Spontaneity,’ Decries Censorship

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Games of Thrones’ Star Sean Bean Says Intimacy Coordinators ‘Spoil the Spontaneity,’ Decries Censorship

By K.J. Yossman


Game of Thrones” actor Sean Bean says intimacy coordinators “spoil the spontaneity” of shooting a sex scene.
“It would inhibit me more because it’s drawing attention to things,” Bean, who played Ned Stark in the hit fantasy show, said of having an intimacy coordinator in the room. “Somebody saying, ‘Do this, put your hands there, while you touch his thing…”
“I think the natural way lovers behave would be ruined by someone bringing it right down to a technical exercise,” he added, comparing his experience to the raunchy 1993 adaptation of “Lady Chatterly’s Lover,” in which he starred opposite Joely Richardson.
“‘Lady Chatterly’ was spontaneous,” Bean said in his interview with the U.K.’s Times Magazine. “It was a joy. We had a good chemistry between us, and we knew what we were doing was unusual. Because she was married, I was married. But we were following the story. We were trying to portray the truth of what DH Lawrence wrote.”


Bean also decried the censorship of his work at the behest of TV companies or advertisers, citing the “Snowpiercer” TV series, in which he currently stars, where he filmed a scene naked alongside Lena Hall. In the bizarre Season 2 scene the duo become intimate with the aid of a mango (as in the fruit). But Bean said “I think they cut a bit out actually. Often the best work you do, where you’re trying to push the boundaries, and the very nature of it is experimental, gets censored when TV companies or the advertisers say it’s so much. It’s a nice scene, quite surreal, dream-like and abstract. And mango-esque.”
When the interviewer pointed out that intimacy coordinators can help to protect actors in the wake of #MeToo, Bean responded: “I suppose it depends on the actress. This one [referring to Hall] had a musical cabaret background, so she was up for anything.”
Hall has starred in Broadway productions of shows including “Kinky Boots,” “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” and “Cats,” among other shows.
In the interview, Bean, who played Boromir in Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings franchise, also turned his eye to fan conventions, describing one (unnamed) LOTR convention as “just a cattle market” when he attended as a guest.
“I didn’t like how the organizers treated the fans,” he said, explaining that when he tried to write messages in addition to signing autographs he was cut off by the staff. “They’d say, ‘No, no, just a signature. He needs to pay more for you writing a message.’ And these fans are good-natured, positive people who were getting tossed around and overcharged for things.”
Bean said he would not attend future fan conventions.
 
Sean Bean Says Intimacy Coordinators ‘Spoil the Spontaneity’ of Sex Scenes
By Zoe Guy
Sean Bean. Photo: Paul Bruinooge/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images
The Game of Thrones orbit have a lot to say about sex scenes lately. In an interview with the Times of London published August 5, Sean Bean, who played Ned Stark before the character’s surprise season-one death, said that intimacy coordinators make sex scenes a technical exercise rather than a natural moment between actors who are acting, which can “spoil the spontaneity” of such scenes. “It would inhibit me more because it’s drawing attention to things,” Bean told the Times. “Somebody saying, ‘Do this, put your hands there, which you touch his thing …’” To Bean, the choreography involved ruins the sex scenes: “I think the natural way lovers behave would be ruined by someone bringing it right down to a technical exercise.” He also compared coordinated scenes with the improvised intimacy of his work in Lady Chatterly’s Lover alongside co-star Joely Richardson. “Lady Chatterly was spontaneous,” he said. “It was a joy. We had a good chemistry between us, and we knew what we were doing was unusual. Because she was married; I was married. But we were following the story. We were trying to portray the truth of what DH Lawrence wrote.”
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He also made a point to say that censorship, too, kills the mood. In the TV adaptation of Snowpiercer, he filmed an intimate moment with actor Lena Hall and a mango. “I think they cut a bit out actually,” he lamented. “Often the best work you do, where you’re trying to push the boundaries, and the very nature of it is experimental, gets censored when TV companies or the advertisers say it’s so much. It’s a nice scene, quite surreal, dreamlike and abstract. And mango-esque.” After the Times asked Bean if intimacy coordinators protect actors, he said it “depends on the actress,” adding that Hall was “up for anything” because she had a background in cabaret.

In 2018, HBO made it standard for sex scenes to be supervised by intimacy coordinators in the wake of Me Too to prevent sexual harassment and exploitation. Conversations about boundaries are still happening on the upcoming Game of Thrones spinoff, House of Dragon. Miguel Sapochnik, the co-showrunner, said that the new show doesn’t shy away from sexual and gender-based violence. “If anything, we’re going to shine a light on that aspect. You can’t ignore the violence that was perpetrated on women by men in that time. It shouldn’t be downplayed and it shouldn’t be glorified.” At the same time, the show plans to “pull back” on the amount of sex overall. On August 2, writer and executive producer Sara Hess walked back Sapochnik’s comments in a statement to Vanity Fair, saying that “we do not depict sexual violence in the show,” though the show will handle one instance “off-screen.”
 
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